Artigo
A survey of radiographic measurement estimation in assessment of dental implant length.
Fecha
2007-11-14Registro en:
The Journal of oral implantology, v. 33, n. 4, p. 186-190, 2007.
0160-6972
10.1563/1548-1336(2007)33[186:ASORME]2.0.CO;2
2-s2.0-35848957029
5663622442588861
5663622442588861[4]
Autor
Universidade Estadual Paulista (Unesp)
Resumen
The aim of this study is to survey radiographic measurement estimation in the assessment of dental implant length according to dentists' confidence. A 19-point questionnaire with closed-ended questions was used by two graduate students to interview 69 dentists during a dental implant meeting. Included were 12 questions related to over- and underestimation in three radiographic modalities: panoramic (P), conventional tomography (T), and computerized tomography (CT). The database was analyzed by Epi-Info 6.04 software and the values from two radiographic modalities, P and T, were compared using a chi2 test. The results showed that 38.24% of the dentists' confidence was in the overestimation of measurements in P, 30.56% in T, and 0% in CT. On the other hand, considering the underestimated measurements, the percentages were 47.06% in P, 33.33% in T, and 1.92% in CT. The frequency of under- and overestimation were statistically significant (chi2 = 6.32; P = .0425) between P and T. CT was the radiographic modality with higher measurement precision according to dentists' confidence. In conclusion, the interviewed dentists felt that CT was the best radiographic modality when considering the measurement estimation precision in preoperative dental implant assessment.